ATi has carved out quite
a niche market with their All in Wonder videocard; they offer great flexibility that often rivals mid-level professional video editing systems, but with ease and
use any consumer can appreciate.

With
the All in Wonder Radeon 8500 128MB model ATi has
gone back to its All in Wonder roots. The AIW 8500 128MB no longer has IEEE 1394
"FireWire"
built directly into the card, and ATi has gone back to a Phillips
TV tuner rather then stick with the one that is used on the 8500DV.

The All
in Wonder Radeon 8500 128MB retails for $525 CDN ($300 US) making it
one of the most expensive videocards out there, however it comes with many features
that regular video cards, even GeForce 4's just don't have.

The AIW Radeon 8500 128MB uses the same core as the
original Radeon 8500 64MB which was released Aug. 2001. The core is clocked at
the same speed as all retail ATi Radeon 8500's (64MB or 128MB) which means the
AIW 8500 128 MB is a very good
performer when it comes to 3D gaming - but there is so much more to the AIW
8500 128MB then just
gaming.

The card is fully VIVO compatible and comes with a
purple break out box which has almost become an ATI trademark in itself which supports
S-Video in, Composite in and left/right RCA audio. Video Out options include S-Video, Composite out and SPDIF output
capabilities.

The AIW kit also comes
with an S-Video to S-Video cable and composite to composite cables. The AIW 8500 128MB natively
supports a digital DVI video port so users with analog monitors will need to use the included Analog-to-DVI
fob.

The
software side of things shows the thought ATI has put into it, along with the usual
driver CD (which is a little old) thre is ATi Mediator Software, Ulead
Video Studio Software and Valve's Half Life. There is hefty users manual for
the videocard, and its features and a multimedia manual as well.